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Fore! Was Iffy Foundation A Vehicle To Support GOP Rep's Golf Habit?

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Rep. Steve Buyer (R-IN)

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Rep. Steve Buyer (R-IN) has long been a passionate golfer. Last year, Golf Digest ranked the lawmaker 32nd, with a handicap of 5.6, on its list of the top 200 golfers in Washington.

Like many members of Congress, Buyer has a history of mixing business and pleasure on the golf course. Now, it looks like the financial dealings of a questionable foundation created by Buyer were even more golf-driven than previously known.

It's been reported that the Frontier Foundation, which has been criticized for raising hundreds of thousands from industry groups seeking to influence Buyer while giving out nothing for its stated purpose of helping Indiana students pay for college, raised virtually all of its money on posh golf junkets. Those included trips with Buyer and groups of lobbyists to deluxe courses at Disney World and the Atlantis resort in the Bahamas.

Buyer also found himself in trouble in the mid-1990s after he didn't report a golfing trip to Lake Tahoe paid for by a telecom lobbying group.

He has claimed the Frontier golf trips are "not fun for me" because travel is a lot of work.

But now, it appears that a chunk of the very small amount of money Frontier did give out -- raised, remember, on posh golf junkets -- was for a golf charity event of a different foundation.

Frontier gave $1,500 per year from 2003 to 2005 to a cancer charity called the Virginia Sheldon Jerome Foundation, founded by Eli Lilly's top D.C. lobbyist for his late wife.

It appears from the foundation's tax filings that it raises money through a golf tournament, held in 2004 at the Stonewall Golf Club in Gainesville, VA. The club features a "challenging Tom Jackson-designed, 18-hole championship golf course that's filled with history and excitement."

At the 2004 tournament, the $1,500 given by Frontier would have made Buyer either a "Closest-to-the-Pin Sponsor" or a "Longest Drive Sponsor."

The $4,500 dollars donated by Frontier to the Jerome Foundation is being returned because Eli Lilly itself gave money to Frontier, Joe Kelley told the Indianapolis Star last week.

Of course, there's absolutely nothing wrong with giving to a cancer charity. But it's telling that $4,500 of the $10,500 given out by Frontier over six years may have been paying for the golf-enthusiast lawmaker to get his fix. (Remember, though, Buyer doesn't even enjoy playing.) And all this while the foundation wasn't giving out a cent in scholarships.

There's no way to know for sure if Buyer attended the golf tournament, because officials at his office, his foundation, and at the Virginia Sheldon Jerome Foundation did not immediately respond to our requests for comment.

It's also worth noting this isn't the first time Buyer has found himself in the rough for a golf-related ethical issue. Indiana's Fort Wayne Journal Gazette noted in 2007 (via Nexis):

Awhile back another Hoosier was caught by the national media in an ethical no-no involving golf. In 1996 ABC's "PrimeTime Live" questioned Rep. Steve Buyer about special interest groups paying for lawmakers to travel to resorts.

A telecommunications lobbying group paid for Buyer to go to Lake Tahoe to make a speech and play golf. But Buyer didn't report it as the House required. An oversight, an aide said at the time.

Late Update: Here's information on Buyer's "Annual Golf Outing" to raise money for his campaign. This year, it was held at the Tippecanoe Country Club in Monticello, IN, and the price was $2,500 per PAC. (h/t TPM Reader EL)

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13 comments

Recommend Recommend (9)

October 22, 2009 12:14 PM   

A crook for sure and I hopes he gets his due w/ a criminal investigation and faces jail time...He can expect a birdie or two behind his cell!

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October 22, 2009 12:52 PM   

It looks like Buyer got into trouble in the 90's for accepting a golf trip from a telecom lobby group directly. So he did the rational thing.

He set up a foundation to accept the money for the golf trips, and had the foundation give the trips to him. Voila! Corporations and lobbyists are not giving him expensive golf trips, but he still doesn't have to give them up. No quid pro quo there, right?

I'm sure that there is a handbook given to new Congressmen that explains how to do avoid the appearance of being bribed by using foundations and leadership Pacs, but apparently Buyer skipped over the footnote that told him not to run the Foundation himself through his campaign organization.

Why didn't he just follow Tom DeLay's example and funnel the money through the RNC? That's how Tom got illegal corporate donations to Republican candidates for the Texas state legislature. Or is money-laundering just too complicated for Buyer?

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October 22, 2009 2:01 PM   

Another Republican in trouble for inappropriately using his position to just get his balls in as many holes as possible.

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October 22, 2009 2:35 PM   

Steve Buyer organized the Frontier Foundation in 2003, the same year the Medicaid prescription bill passed. Over the next five years, the pharmaceutical industry contributes more than $500k to Buyer's foundation.

Buyer uses the money to fund trips to expensive resorts in the Bahamas, Arizona and Florida.

Sounds like legal bribery to me.

Were the foundation's other contributions for golf tournaments, too? That would explain why the foundation chose to donate to organizations that didn't meet the foundation's stated goals.

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October 22, 2009 2:54 PM   

He's just living up to the GOP creed: A toxic combination of self-minded focus and arrogance.®

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October 22, 2009 3:27 PM   

What a lame ass excuse. "I wasn't having fun & traveling is a lot of work". He must really, really hate his actual job. I would love to have my own tournament, especially if the other players had to donate money to me just to play. Also, if his handicap is really 5.6, then he's pretty dang good. That requires a lot of practice & dedication. Not something you'd do if you weren't having fun.
Golf is a gentlemen's sport that is self policed & very ethical. How many institutions is this guy actively disgracing?

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October 22, 2009 3:35 PM    in reply to Leftflank

All of them? As I said in a previous post, I can only hope that enough ethics scandals catch him to get him jailed or kicked out of the House by the House, because his district is so gerrymandered he can't possibly lose.

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KLG

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October 22, 2009 3:35 PM   

"deluxe courses at Disney World and the Atlantis resort in the Bahamas." Not really. There may be good reasons to go to each place, but golf isn't one of them. What a chiseler if he can't do any better than this!

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October 22, 2009 3:44 PM   

Buyer told the Indy Star that four of the tournaments were held in the Bahamas and that they were comprised of seven to eight foursomes.

Did a couple of dozen pharmaceutical and telecom execs travel to the Bahamas to play a round of golf every year with Buyer? Is it that easy to corral a bunch of busy execs into going to the Bahamas just to play a round of golf w/Buyer?

Do we know the foundaton actually held tournaments? Has anyone seen a brochure or flier with info on the events?

Did Buyer's family go along on these outings? His son and daughter are on the board so I guess they could have justified spending foundation money to go to the Bahamas, too.

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October 22, 2009 4:09 PM   

Buyer was an impeachment manager.

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October 22, 2009 4:31 PM   

Getting down to the nitty gritty, how red is Buyer's district?

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October 22, 2009 4:45 PM   

There are no ethics in the House of Representatives. Not all are crooks but too many push the envelope, like Buyer, and nothing will happen. At worse a slap on the wrist just like DeLay. He should probably be in jail. I believe it is "don't accuse me and I won't accuse you." You really have to really be ethically challenged, like Gingrich, to get exposed. Embarrassment or shame doesn't work because they haven't any.

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October 22, 2009 6:25 PM   

It's good.

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